Engineers Working On Swarm Of Laser Wielding Satellites To Deflect Asteroids 114
Zothecula writes with news involving space and lasers. From the article: "A collision between Earth and an asteroid a few kilometers in diameter would release as much energy as the simultaneous detonation of several million nuclear bombs, and with the impact of an asteroid estimated at around 10 km (6.2 miles) in diameter believed to be responsible for wiping out the dinosaurs, numerous strategies have been devised to try and avoid such devastation. The latest idea comes from engineers at Glasgow's University of Strathclyde who suggest that a swarm of laser-wielding satellites could nudge Earth-bound asteroids off their collision course."
Obligatory (Score:1)
Sharks in space?
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But they are ill-tempered.
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Spaceward
Hunting
Arrangement of
Ray-Focussing
Killer
Satellites?
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The Moon Landing was 43 years ago. If you take the time Austin Powers was out from now is 1/3 of the time from the moon landing.
So big asteroids become little asteroids (Score:1)
Which means more space junk. Whee!
Re:So big asteroids become little asteroids (Score:5, Informative)
RTFA, although I know this isn't a popular idea.
The big asteroids become big asteroids moving in a different direction, and a puff of hot vapour where the laser has ablated a chunk of the surface.
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I'm sure he was talking about the satellites themselves
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Agree, no he wasn't, but it is a somewhat valid point, unless these laser wielding satellites can be put out in Solar orbit....
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I was thinking of the satellites - again, they might accomplish their mission better roving in a Solar orbit rather than stuck around Earth... also, I'm thinking it's going to take more than one or two big solar panel arrays to make any appreciable impact on asteroid tragectory...
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Apparently they never played "Asteroids"...
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You should have taken Latin in high school/college, then.
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"Accusative" always seemed too confrontational to me, though.
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Yes, exactly. No-one Rs TFM if they can help it, but zapping pretty much anything with lasers is always cool.
Re:So big asteroids become little asteroids (Score:5, Insightful)
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Your argument is the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs was huge. So it would necessarily take one as big to cause significant damage, and thus take too much laser to move. Thus, the laser must be for only weapons.
What if a 2 km square meteor could cause catastrophic damage, and could easily be mitigated through lasers. Is it worth putting lasers in the sky that could mitigate the disaster while also destroying space junk at the cost of militarizing space?
(Note: the answer lies in the fact you already t
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Bla blah about the size of the state of Texas. Texas, asshole. Blah blah crayons.
Unless I'm extremely misinformed, Texas is a wee bit bigger than an estimated 10 km (about 6 miles) [wikipedia.org]. While still big enough to be a huge problem, Texas-sized it wasn't.
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I couldn't help it (Score:1)
Are those friggin' satellites with friggin' lasers on their friggin...Yeah, I don't know where I was going with that.
Re:Cool (Score:4, Informative)
No, the two halves would go around the earth and rejoin on the other side just like something out of Scooby Doo, which based on the apparent comprehension level I'm guessing is the favorite cartoon of most of these AC's.
Note that the headline includes the word 'deflect' and the summary mentions nudging asteroids off of a collision course. Neither suggests that the asteroid would be split. To save time, it also does not mention 'death wielding laser of doom' (even though those would be awesome), sharks (although it does fit dinosaurs in), or anything about using these satellites to 'deflect' political opponents (but it does almost mention why that wouldn't work, traveling through the atmosphere).
Now please go back to aol or myspace, where your reading comprehension, grammar, and lack of identity will no doubt leave them in awe.
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We don't have a laser that can cut apart something as large as a large building much less a mountain sized meteor. The point of the laser is the equivalent of spraying a beach ball ball with a squirt gun. A small shift in trajectory (basically a little nudge), at distances like a parsec can change the final position by more than the diameter of the Earth, which would turn a direct hit into a near miss. As long as we have several decades of warning that a meteor is a threat, we have time to bump the asteroid
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at distances like a parsec
I do not think it [wikipedia.org] means what you think it means...
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A parsec [wikipedia.org] (pc) is ~3.26 light-years [wikipedia.org]. It would be amazing if we could even see a non-luminous 10 km rock at that distance, let alone hit it with a laser -- we'd have to aim at where we think it would be 3.26 years later, to begin with. For some scale, Pluto [wikipedia.org] is about 39 AU [wikipedia.org]~=5.5 light hours [wikipedia.org]~=0.000192 pc from the Sun; the Kuiper Belt [wikipedia.org] extends to about 50 AU~=7 lh~=0.000245 pc out; and the heliopause [wikipedia.org] is somewhere between 90 AU~=12.5 lh~=0.000436 pc and 230 AU~=32 lh~=0.00111 pc. The nearest star to the Sun, Pro [wikipedia.org]
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Government promises to only use them for asteroids (Score:5, Funny)
"These satellites, which we will use for asteroid deflection only, not for covert assassinations or as a dreadful weapon of war, will be a vital part in ensuring the future of human civilization" said a Pentagon spokesperson. "We look forward for a chance to put these satellites, which will not be a part of any secret missile shield program nor used to destroy terrorist hideouts, into orbit to protect our planet."
Diplomacy won't find a way (Score:3)
Like the dozens of similar comments waiting to suggest that this technology could be used to target land-based settlements (although if you RTFA, it's suggested that it might not be able to) or other satellites, there will probably be a number of concerned politicians who will gun this down on the same premises. With all of the cyberwar going on these days, both intergovernmental and rogue, it seems inevitable that someone will figure out how to hijack these things. (Possibly Kevin Mitnick whistling into a
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It sounds like the plan is for the satellites to only be launched when an asteroid is detected incoming (probably a few months before it would hit), since they mention flying the satellites in formation with the asteroid. That means the satellites aren't a permanent thing and in fact will probably be non-functional after serving their purpose, so there really couldn't ever be any political argument against a deployment of such a system in a case of actual need (I mean a good political argument, I'm sure som
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I don't know why they're looking at lasers, but the only idea I've heard, which sounds workable, is send up robotic rockets which attach, drive in a spike or something, and drive the thing to a new course.
Why lasers? Do you really trust them not to ever be directed earthbound, towards some guy who has a name which rhymes with Sim Pong Nun? So very tempting and all you need is a rationalizer-in-chief to make it so.
Re:Government promises to only use them for astero (Score:4, Interesting)
If you look at the details, which would include the mass and velocity of the asteroid in question, you'll understand. The mass and fuel needed for such a "tug" satellite would be directly proportional and not possibly to launch, much less have extra fuel to maneuver over to the target, etc.
They asteroids in question only look small and slow because of the incomprehensible size and emptiness of the background. That is, lack of a good reference point.
http://www.brighthub.com/science/space/articles/64710.aspx [brighthub.com]
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wouldn't it be more efficient to have the lasers ground based and just give them extra juice to overcome any losses in the atmosphere? Seems like it would be a lot cheaper and avoid that "militarization of space" problem.
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"At the end of the day the energy requirements are the same."
No.
Conventional rocket: you have to haul up the fuel and the reaction mass. Also very inefficient
Ion thruster: very efficient, can be solar powered, but you still have to haul up the reaction mass
Lasers: probably more efficient than a conventional rocket, can be solar powered, don't need reaction mass (they use the asteroid for that)
The amount of stuff you have to haul up to the asteroid is GREATLY reduced using the laser solution, and therefore
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Lasers are more efficient because they use bits of the asteroid itself as reaction mass.
This idea is to use lots of little lasers instead of one big one. The big one could theoretically be directed Earthward, maybe, but the little ones almost certainly can't. They're too small to have much effect through the atmosphere.
If some military with launch capabilities wants to put lasers in orbit, you won't even know about it. Why would they advertise it by calling it an asteroid shield?
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If some military with launch capabilities wants to put lasers in orbit, you won't even know about it. Why would they advertise it by calling it an asteroid shield?
You advertise it so you can put a bigger laser in orbit; since this is a popular threat scenario you can probably militarize the hell out of space before people wake up to object. But then again, maybe I'm a cynic.
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The proposal is to put smaller lasers up.
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The proposal is to put smaller lasers up.
Meh, really?
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The article: the details it has.
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Context, it doesn't really mean anything to you then.
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"These satellites, which we will use for asteroid deflection only, not for covert assassinations or as a dreadful weapon of war, will be a vital part in ensuring the future of human civilization" said a Pentagon spokesperson. "We look forward for a chance to put these satellites, which will not be a part of any secret missile shield program nor used to destroy terrorist hideouts, into orbit to protect our planet."
Meanwhile, at the UN "We other, lesser governments, know that the US is only interested in protecting ALL of us (the little people) from comets and such and not just interested in militarizing space because they just couldn't....they wouldn't." "They'd never blow anybody up with these" added Iraq.
Re:Government promises to only use them for astero (Score:4, Interesting)
Lasers are just a way to transfer energy and the only energy those satellites will have comes from a few solar panels. It would be too weak to pose a threat to even a single human. It could theoretically be used for targeting though.
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if they are too big then they run the risk of being damaged by debris.
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We can't even tell if an asteroid will hit Earth or not with reasonable precision, we can only calculate a chance. Controlling or even telling where will it hit Earth is impossible, which means anyone who tries this has a fair chance of directing the asteroid on themselves.
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I wouldn't entirely put that past the Americans though.
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I stopped reading at (Score:4, Funny)
A big bad asteroid hurtling towards our little blue planet. Then the camera pans around and we see a huge number of little dots. Flying closer, we see a huge swarm of frickin' space sharks swooping down towards the asteroid, shooting their lasers at it while Bruce Willis, riding the lead shark, yells "Yippee-ki-yay, motherfucker." I'd pay money to see that.
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didn't they do this on Stargate SG1?? (Score:2)
as i remember it did not go so well hint if they look like pyramids they are a NO GO
---If detected in time...maybe (Score:2)
We can't identify all potential large asteroids and astrophysicists have estimated those % and they are, as I recall, 10-20% of those in the Kuiper Belt.
Even with the best defensive satellites, we may not detect a big asteroid in time to deflect it. Some significant asteroids approach from the direction of the Sun making them hard to detect.
When the diameter of an asteroid gets twice as large, it takes 8 times the energy to alter its course a given amount and certainly has probably more than 8 times the im
Practice targets (Score:2)
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As a pacifist... (Score:1)
...I deplore these aggressive measures. The better answer is to move the Earth out of the asteroid's way.
A power so great... (Score:1)
HAHA (Score:2)
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Love the units (Score:2)
Exactly how many gigatons is "several million nuclear bombs"?
I mean, obviously it's largely irrelevant at the scales they're talking about and the layperson reads that as "several million times the hiroshima bomb" which is what they're going for. But can we stop dumbing down this shit and actually try to educate people just a little?
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"I mean, obviously it's largely irrelevant at the scales they're talking about"
The measurement is highly variable so it's not a problem to have the unit be a bit vague. You said yourself it doesn't matter.
Why not... (Score:2)
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Because then we'd have a black hole heading for Earth instead of an asteroid.
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... until the LHC breaks down (which seems to happen pretty often). You know, it wouldn't surprise me if that scenario was made into a Japanese anime movie.
1 100kt nuke a billion miles before it hits (Score:3)
We are talking about a 400 lb payload. Compare that with the 1800 lb of a voyager probe.
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Properly placed, it would remove some mass from the object. Given enough time, that will changed it's trajectory. And the sooner we know, the less mass we need to change.
This sounds like an idea I had recently (Score:1)
This sounds like an idea I had recently [google.com].
I wonder if the spacecraft actually have to get close to the asteroid for this to work. I mean, once you're in orbit, you're more than half way to anywhere you want to go, but I still wonder if a system like this wouldn't be more responsive and easier to maintain if we kept it in earth orbit? Do we have lasers that won't diverge more than a meter over a few gigameters of distance?
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This sounds like an idea I had recently [google.com].
Actually, it sounds more like an idea Kenton Varda had :)
Jokes aside,
Do we have lasers that won't diverge more than a meter over a few gigameters of distance?
No, we don't. I couldn't find numbers, but as you'd probably need lenses to produce a collimated beam it'd be extremely difficult to manufacture them with enough precision. Even a meter of divergence would be far to wide to generate enough heat to cause a burst of ejected material. According to the researchers in The Fine Article you'll want to get those lasers in as close as possible.
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*chuckle* Well, yeah, sort of. I thought of his solution and set it aside in the hopes something earth-based could work.
But it sounds like a collimated beam with less than a meter of divergence over gigameters is beyond current technology, and certainly not possible from an earth-based station. :-/ *sigh* That shoots (pun intended) that idea down.
I guess getting them to the asteroid isn't too hard once they're in orbit. But it would still take a lot of time, likely months or years (even with clever stealin
Dupe (Score:2)
I played this game years ago. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asteroids_(video_game) [wikipedia.org]
Move along, nothing to see here (Score:2)
Its for... asteroids where asteroid means: hostile target.
It is, of course, (Score:2)
all about time. IF you had enough time, you could just launch rocks and have a robot pt them on the asteroid. the increase in mass will changes it's course.
I'm thinking (Score:2)
day of the triffids
Why use lasers when you could use sunlight? (Score:1)
Just create a bunch of mirrors and point them all at the same spot on the side of the asteroid, create the big gas plume, and send it on its way.